Another life-saving law

August 15, 2012 - 1:30pm

On May 12, 1998, Danny Keysar, a 16 1/2 months-old toddler, was strangled at his licensed childcare facility in Chicago neighborhood.    Danny was killed by a defective children’s product -- a mesh portable crib or play yard -- the Playskool Travel-Lite–where he napped in the afternoons at his childcare home.

On August 14, 2008, Congress passed the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act that – for the first time – directs the Consumer Product Safety Commission to set safety standards for children’s products and requires they be tested to ensure compliance.   Infants and toddlers are safer as the Commission sets standards for cribs, bath seats, portable bed rails, infant walkers and toddler beds, high chairs, booster chairs, hook on chairs; gates and other enclosures; stationary activity centers; infant carriers; strollers; walkers; swings; and bassinets and cradles, changing tables, infant bath tubs, and infant slings. 

Before this law was passed industry was allowed to rely on industry-set and monitored voluntary standards.  It wasn’t good enough.

The act also banned a family of chemicals known as phthalates, which are widely found in plastic toys and have been linked to reproductive disorders and other health problems.

And it dramatically reduced the amount of lead allowed in children’s toys after millions of toys were found to be coated in toxic levels of lead paint. Products that don’t meet the standards will be banned.

The law also created the nation's first online database, SaferProducts.gov, where consumers can post safety complaints about products and the rest of us can search for reports on products before we buy.  It’s a public, not private, database that serves a function we all want – to ensure the products we buy for our children and ourselves are safe before we buy.   It’s an incredibly cool and useful government service.  Try a search here.

The 2008 law updates the 1972 Consumer Product Safety Act that created the Consumer Product Safety Commission and gave it authority to set safety standards, ban dangerous products and force recalls of unsafe products.  Industry battled the law first proposed by President Lyndon Johnson in 1968 but passed after a 1970 report by a bipartisan commission found that 20 million people were injured each year by unsafe products.  The Chamber of Commerce said in 1971 the proposed law was “patently dangerous to our competitive system.”

Arch Booth, president of the Chamber in the early 1970s claimed that business didn’t need government to make their products safe. “There are bureaucrats in Washington who believe their judgment is superior to yours, as a consumer," he said. "So they want to “protect” you by insuring that the only choices open to you are those meeting with their approval. They are really a warmhearted bunch. Just a little conceited, that’s all.”   

Industry kept up their attacks after the Act became law – replacing mandatory standards with industry-set voluntary standards, weakening the authority of the Commission and stripping it of the resources it needed to do its job.   Consumer advocates like the Consumer Federation of America, Public Citizen and U.S. Public Interest Research Group never gave up – making public the steady flow disasters and accidents in our homes, the threats to our children’s safety and the need for laws with teeth.  Finally, in 2008, The Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act took the next significant step – it set mandatory standards for dozens of products, gave the Consumer Product Safety Commission the resources it needs to protect the public, increased civil penalties for violations of consumer laws, and protects whistleblowers who report product safety defects.

Next time the Chamber of Commerce talks about so-called “job killing” regulations ask them about the thousands of infants and children that were injured or killed in their crib and nursery products since Danny Keysar’s tragic death.

Life-saving rules and regulations have saved millions of lives in the U.S.  It’s worth repeating over and over and over again. 

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